Discussion

Blue Mountain/ Collingwood Lunch, Dinner Options?

Will be spending a long weekend in January in the area and was hoping for some unique and local options. Anything where an adventurous andcompletely non-picky four year old would be happy, would be appreciated aswell. Also ,we will have a kitchenette, so any cool shops (cheese, bakery, etc.) would be great aswell. Thanks in advance

For lunch you MUST visit Ravenna Country Market, which is only a 10 minute drive from Thornbury (20 minute drive from Collingwood). Their lunches and baked goods are great! Very unique.

Thornbury Bakery Cafe is also good for lunch as another posted has said. A cute cheese shop is right across the street. Bridges in Thornbury is also real good.

For breakfast/lunch in Collingwood Cafe Chartreuse is a great option. They also sell lots of their yummy baked goods, breads and also cheeses.

Dags & Willows in Collingwood for more cheese and artisanal fare.

Green Mango Tree in Collingwood has beautiful Thai food. Rockdell Tavern has amazing steaks and chops and stuff, very reasonably priced. Better steaks than I've had at high end steak places in Toronto. Also a unique spot.

Anything new up at the mountain that's worth checking out? We're doing a Bruce Peninsula trip and will be stopping here first.

We ski up here in the winter so fairly familiar with the dismal food situation. Rusty's BBQ was a standby but it's been terribly inconsistent on recent visits.

3 Guys and a Stove was also a standby but has been replaced with Magnone's Italian Kitchen. The stinky Irish Pub has a new name too. I've only had drinks there but by stinky I mean that they have a mould issue or some problem that makes the place smell odd.

Dismal food situation?? That area is a foodie haven!! The variety of local producers and good spots to eat are undeniable. Not to mention the wonderful farmer's markets.....

The places you've mentioned are all at Intrawest. It's like eating near the Rogers Centre when visiting Toronto - they're tourist spots. Not much substance that I'm aware of.

In addition to the places I've mentioned (all of which I still highly recommend), you could try Bridges Tavern or The Dam Pub (both in Thornbury), Ashanti for coffee and pastries, and Curries for yummy baked treats and farmstand produce. There are lots of farmstands along Highway 26. All of them awesome.

There is also Tremont Cafe, The Hungry Sumo, Cabin, Nick’s Great Italian Take-Out located at the Hasty Market in the Cranberry Mews, Harbour Street Fish Bar, Duncan's, and Pure Organic Food & Juice Bar. I've been to none of these but have heard good things.

My top 3 suggestions are Ravenna Country Market, Rockdell Tavern, and Green Mango Tree for Thai better than I've had at most places in Toronto. All are gems. Ravenna Country Market is a beautiful spot to boot.

Thanks for the tips Magic! We will check some of those out during ski season. The other half was more up for sacrificing food quality for the ability to have cocktails in the village and not drive so we ended up doing that.

First night we went to Oliver & Bonicini up at the Westin. Like the other O&B places we've been to in the city it was enjoyable but nothing particularly special. Second night we returned to Rusty's and had some decent pub food including a particularly awesome pulled pork.

I have a misguided dream that the Blue village will turn a food corner eventually. Excellent food can be found in other Intrawest (or former Intrawest) villages including Whistler and to a lesser extent Tremblant, so hope they make it there at some point.

Hey magic - I'm heading up with my kids next week to visit a friend who has a place near Kimberley. Anywhere I can make a stop along the way (i.e. not far off the highway - 10 north/89 west) for a quick lunch? Maybe somewhere between Orangeville and Shelburne? Thanks.

The only places that come to mind on Hwy 10 in that area are 3 places I've never been to (as I don't usually stop around there):

Champ BurgerSuperburgerSteven's BBQ Restaurant

Also, there's a Subway. Johnny's Pizza as well, at Hwys. 89/124 near Shelburne - but again, I've never been.

On Highway 10 there is also Flapjack's, but that is just south of Orangeville. They were recently featured on You Gotta Eat Here (along with a couple other Orangeville spots) but I've never been myself. They aren't open every day, might want to look into their hours....

I know very little about it. Just that I've been driving past this buliding for the past 5 years and they keep lunch/brekky hours so it's always closed when I drive by. From what I hear, they still make good food.

Haven't tried it, or the BBQ place. Hubby hung up on Superburger for nostalgia reasons and kids like eating in the old streetcar. After my last particularly bad visit (have to ask for napkins from the counter staff as they dont have any out, nor salt packs for their terrible unsalted fries) - I'm REALLY hoping to never go back. Current owners are cheaping out over the place and the food already sucked.

Just an update Magic's suggestions are all solid. We have family in Thornbury and The Dam Pub is a current favourite.

If you are stuck in the village or don't feel like driving, Magnone's is the best bet. We've had 3 meals there going back to the last ski season and really enjoyed all of it. The house made sausage is awesome so any dish involving that is good. Also the Chicken Parmesan is fantastic.

The pizza is good, but on the small side. We've split one as an appetizer but not sure if it would hold up as a main. It's a similar style to Buca in Toronto.

It's a bit overpriced, like everything else up there, but it's our current favourite in the village.

I finally tried Swiss Canadian in Collingwood right on Hwy 26. Not bad! Very old school, more of a deli/bakery with seating than a proper restaurant - things are reheated rather tahn cooked to order. Great Homemade soup. European sweets that aren't terribly sweet, eclairs with real whipped cream (but not great chocolate).

Hi everyone - what are our best options actually in the village for dinner? Am heading there this weekend with my husband, and will venture out for lunches but will want to be in the village for dinner so that we can have some drinks and don't need to worry about driving back.

We ate at Twist & Wine Lounge in the fall as we were drawn in due to their social hour specials (between 3-6pm). They have a lot of $5-6 drink specials at that time along with some appetizers on special. If you want to linger into dinner, they also have an ok menu (typical steak, pasta, chicken, salmon choices) and claim they have over 50 martinis and 100 wines to choose from.

The restaurant is associated with Magnone's Italian, which abigllama has given high ratings to above.

Oliver & Bonicini at the Westin may be predictable but is sold and has a wider food menu to choose from. I'd say the food is better than Twist but if it's drinks you're after, then maybe Twist would be a better option.

Twist is a a nice space and we tend to stop in for a cocktail before heading off to dinner. Have had apps there which were good but never a full dinner. The food always looked pretty good but always forget about it as a dinner destination for some reason.

Magnone's is still really good an we go regularly when there. It's expensive like everything else but the quality and flavours are there and service is always good.

Oliver & Bonicini is also still a standby for us. Things seem to range from pretty good to fantastic but have never had a bad meal. The mac & cheese with smoked chicken is particularly awesome after a day of skiing. The wine list is fine, but would stick to Twist for cocktails.

Firehall Pizza company is a good choice if you have kids in tow. But Magnone's is the better and more grown-up friendly version of that if you don't. The sushi place is great to grab a take out snack or lunch for the room, but the space is a bit off putting and have never been drawn to eat dinner there.

Avoid the Irish Pub place and Kaytoo, it's super expensive freezer to fryer stuff. Rusty's has hit or miss BBQ but was more miss the last couple of times and have not been in a couple of years.

Chuck Burger is a newish burger place in the village that's quite good. They grind daily and the flavour was really good. SO grabbed take out for us and we ate in the condo, can't really comment on the space. But it's a nice fast food option at a decent price point. Not a dinner destination, but pretty sure it was licensed if you wanted something quick and easy with a beer.